CTIF Gene Summary [Human]

CTIF is a component of the CBP80 (NCBP1; MIM 600469)/CBP20 (NCBP2; MIM 605133) translation initiation complex that binds cotranscriptionally to the cap end of nascent mRNA. The CBP80/CBP20 complex is involved in a simultaneous editing and translation step that recognizes premature termination codons (PTCs) in mRNAs and directs PTC-containing mRNAs toward nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). On mRNAs without PTCs, the CBP80/CBP20 complex is replaced with cytoplasmic mRNA cap-binding proteins, including EIF4G (MIM 600495), and steady-state translation of the mRNAs resumes in the cytoplasm (Kim et al., 2009 [PubMed 19648179]).[supplied by OMIM, Dec 2009]

Details

Type
Protein Coding
Official Symbol
CTIF
Official Name
cap binding complex dependent translation initiation factor [Source:HGNC Symbol;Acc:HGNC:23925]
Ensembl ID
ENSG00000134030
Bio databases IDs NCBI: 9811 Ensembl: ENSG00000134030
Aliases cap binding complex dependent translation initiation factor
Synonyms cap binding complex dependent translation initiation factor, CBP80/20-dependent translation initiation factor, Gm672, KIAA0427, LOC679129
Species
Human, Homo sapiens
OrthologiesMouseRat

Protein Domains

A protein domain is a distinct structural or functional region within a protein that can evolve, function, and exist independently of the rest of the protein chain. These domains in human CTIF often fold into stable, three-dimensional structures and are associated with specific biological functions, such as binding to DNA, other proteins, or small molecules.
  • MIF4G domain
  • protein binding

Top Findings

The most significant associations for this gene, including commonly observed domains, pathway involvement, and functional highlights based on current data.
disease
  • male pattern hair loss
  • gout
  • migraine with aura
  • migraines
  • aortic disorder
  • idiopathic scoliosis
regulated by
regulates
role in cell
  • nonsense-mediated mRNA decay in

Subcellular Expression

Locations within the cell where the protein is known or predicted to be active, providing insight into its function and cellular context.
  • Cytoplasm
  • perinuclear region
  • cytosol

Gene Ontology Annotations

Describes the biological processes, cellular components, and molecular functions associated with the human CTIF gene, providing context for its role in the cell.

Biological Process

Functions and activities the gene product is involved in
  • positive regulation of translation
  • nuclear-transcribed mRNA catabolic process, nonsense-mediated decay
  • regulation of translational initiation

Cellular Component

Where in the cell the gene product is active
  • perinuclear region of cytoplasm
  • cytosol

Molecular Function

What the gene product does at the molecular level
  • protein binding
  • RNA binding
  • translation activator activity

Gene-Specific Assays for Results You Can Trust

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